Tuscan Sausage Penne

Creamy Tuscan Sausage Pasta: The 30-Minute Dinner That Tastes Like You Tried


There’s a category of dinner that looks like effort, tastes like a restaurant, and actually took thirty minutes on a Tuesday. Creamy Tuscan sausage pasta lives there. Italian sausage browned in a skillet, garlic, sun-dried tomatoes, baby spinach, heavy cream, parmesan, and penne — everything in one pan and on the table before anyone gets desperate enough to suggest takeout. The sauce is rich and silky. The sausage has actual flavor. The sun-dried tomatoes add a concentrated sweetness that makes the whole thing taste like someone who knew what they were doing made it.

That someone is you, in thirty minutes, with one pan to clean.

Italian sausage with the casings removed is doing a lot of work in this recipe beyond just being protein. It’s already seasoned — fennel, garlic, herbs, fat — which means you don’t have to build as much flavor into the sauce from scratch. When you brown it and break it up, those seasoned bits render into the pan and become the base of the entire sauce. Ground beef is blander and leaner in a way that shows. Chicken sausage works but produces a drier, lighter result. The pork Italian sausage is the version this recipe is built around. Mild or hot is your call — hot adds a background warmth that works well against the cream.

Remove the casings before it goes in the pan. Squeeze the meat out directly into the skillet and break it up with a spoon. You want irregular pieces, not uniform crumbles — the texture variation is part of what makes this feel like a real meal.

First: don’t skip the pasta water. Before you drain the penne, scoop out half a cup of the starchy cooking water and set it aside. Starchy pasta water is what makes a cream sauce cling to the pasta instead of pooling at the bottom of the bowl. Add a splash when you toss the pasta into the sauce — it loosens everything without thinning the flavor.

Second: add the parmesan off the heat or on very low heat. Parmesan breaks and turns grainy if it hits a sauce that’s actively boiling. Pull the pan off the burner, add the cheese, stir until it melts into the cream. Then add the pasta. This is the difference between a silky sauce and a clumpy one and it takes ten extra seconds.

Sun-dried tomatoes packed in oil are what you want here — they’re soft, already rehydrated, and carry flavor from the oil they’ve been sitting in. Dry-packed sun-dried tomatoes are chewier and need to be soaked first or they’ll be tough in the finished dish. Drain the oil-packed ones before adding them, then roughly chop. They go in after the garlic and before the cream, giving them a minute in the pan to warm through and concentrate further.

Pasta shape: penne is the right call here because the tubes trap the sauce, but rigatoni, fusilli, or farfalle all work. Long pasta like fettuccine also works if that’s what you have. What doesn’t work as well: very small pasta shapes like orzo or ditalini — they get lost in the sauce and the ratio feels off.

Spinach: baby spinach wilts into the sauce in about sixty seconds and essentially disappears into the dish. Kale works but needs two to three minutes and stays slightly chewier. Arugula added at the very end, off the heat, gives a peppery bite that’s excellent if you want something different.

Cream: heavy cream is what makes the sauce rich and stable. Half and half works but the sauce will be thinner and more prone to breaking if the heat gets too high. Don’t substitute milk — it won’t thicken properly.

Crusty bread to drag through the sauce is the correct answer and requires no argument. A simple arugula salad with lemon and parmesan if you want something green that didn’t already go into the pasta. Nothing elaborate — this dish is the main event.

Three to four days in the fridge. The sauce thickens significantly overnight as the pasta absorbs it. Reheat on the stovetop over low heat with a splash of chicken broth or water to loosen it back up — don’t microwave it straight from cold or the cream sauce will separate. It reheats well with a little patience and the flavor is genuinely better the next day.

A creamy pasta entree from an Italian restaurant or delivery app runs $17–22 before fees. With delivery and tip, $24–30. This recipe feeds four for about $12–15 in ingredients. One skillet, one pot for the pasta, done.

Tuscan Sausage Penne

Creamy Tuscan Sausage Pasta

A rich, restaurant-worthy pasta that comes together in one pan in under 30 minutes. Creamy, garlicky, and packed with flavor — this one will be on permanent rotation.
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes
Total Time 30 minutes
Course Main Course
Cuisine American, Italian
Servings 4

Ingredients
  

Meat & Protein

  • 1 pound Italian sausage casings removed

Produce

  • 4 Garlic cloves minced
  • 1/3 cup Sun-dried tomatoes drained and chopped
  • 2 cups Fresh baby spinach

Dairy

  • 1 cup Heavy cream
  • 1/2 cup Parmesan cheese grated

Pantry & Canned Goods

  • 12 ounces Penne pasta
  • 1/2 cup Chicken broth

Seasonings & Spices

  • 1 tsp Italian seasoning

Instructions
 

  • Cook the pasta according to package directions until al dente. Reserve 1/2 cup pasta water before draining. Set aside.
  • In a large skillet over medium-high heat, cook the sausage, breaking it apart with a spoon, until browned and cooked through — about 7 minutes. Do not drain the fat, it adds flavor.
  • Reduce heat to medium. Add the garlic and Italian seasoning to the sausage and cook 1 minute until fragrant. Pour in the heavy cream and chicken broth, stirring to combine. Let it simmer for 3 minutes until slightly thickened.
  • Stir in the sun-dried tomatoes and spinach. Cook 2 minutes until spinach wilts. Add the parmesan and stir until melted into the sauce.
  • Add the drained pasta and toss to coat. If the sauce is too thick, splash in reserved pasta water a little at a time. Serve immediately with extra parmesan on top.

Notes

Swap the protein: Boneless chicken thighs sliced thin work beautifully
in place of sausage.
 
Make it lighter: Substitute half and half for heavy cream — still creamy,
a little less rich.
 
Storage: Keeps in the fridge 3 days. Reheat with a splash of broth to
loosen the sauce.
Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

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